I
have purchased and read many of your books.....all of which are wonderful and
have been a tremendous help to this novice horse lover/owner. My question now
. . . can you give me some straightforward tips on teaching my young horse to
stand quietly while being groomed, bathed, clipped, etc. She is usually in cross
ties when I am grooming her, but she continually moves her hind end back and forth
. . . . usually I wind up dancing with her the whole time I am grooming her. I
believe the cross ties are the right "fit", although she moves forward
and backward a little also. Any comments would be greatly appreciated! J.

Hi J:

Before you put a horse in cross ties, she should have excellent
ground manners on the end of a 10-foot lead rope. You should also be able to touch
the horse all over without her moving while she is on the long lead rope.

THEN, she should be tied to a solid hitch rail
or post at a height at least as high as her withers. You should be able to move
the horse back and forth from left to right so you can put each side of her body
alongside the hitch rail. THEN do all of the things you will later do to your
horse in cross ties -- clipping, grooming, handling legs etc. Do all things from
both sides alternating which side of her body is alongside the hitch rail. Using
the hitch rail to help steady her will help her make the association she should
not move into you or away from you while you work.

Eventually
you want to be able to do all of these things with your horse standing perpendicular
to the hitch rail. Once you can do that, without the horse moving, you are ready
to move the horse into the cross ties . . . and NOT before!!

Throughout
all of the above lessons, make solid associations with voice commands so later
when you progress to cross ties, the horse remembers what "whoa" means
in spite of the fact that you are "stimulating" her reflexes with touching/grooming.

It is a progression. Start with the simple things.
Do them well. Then the more advanced things come easier.

The
information contained on this site is provided for general informational and educational
purposes only. The suggestions and guidelines should not be used as the sole
answer for a visitor's specific needs.